Little Anthony & the Imperials enjoyed
one of the longest career runs of any doo wop group, adapting
their honey-smooth style to fit the sweet uptown soul sound of
the mid-'60s. Right from the beginning, Little Anthony's
aching way with a ballad was the group's calling card, but
their repertoire was balanced by more R&B-inflected dance
tunes.
Little Anthony was born Jerome Anthony
Gourdine in 1940, and grew up in Brooklyn's Fort Greene
projects. While in high school, he sang in a doo wop group
called the Duponts, who recorded a single called "Prove
It Now" in 1957. They disbanded after graduation,
however, and Gourdine joined another group called the Chesters,
which had been formed by his friend Clarence Collins
(baritone) and also featured longtime friend Ernest Wright,
Jr. (tenor); the other members were Tracy Lord (tenor) and Nat
Rogers (bass). After a one-off single for Apollo, they landed
a record deal with the End label in 1958, at which point their
name was changed to the Imperials. ("Little Anthony"
was later tagged onto the beginning by DJ Alan Freed.)
The
Imperials' first single for End was the classic heartache
ballad "Tears on My Pillow" --
a Top Five smash on both the pop and R&B charts. Little
Anthony's dramatic interpretation was certainly helped in the
public eye by his youthful-sounding voice and name, which
recalled the recently popular Frankie Lymon. The single's
B-side, "Two People in the
World", was also something of a hit, making the
Imperials one of the hottest vocal groups around. Landing a
follow-up hit proved difficult, however; the group charted
several singles — "So Much," "Wishful
Thinking," "A Prayer and a Juke Box" —
without even approaching their earlier success. Finally, the
novelty dance track "Shimmy,
Shimmy, Ko-Ko-Bop" caught on in 1960 and returned
Little Anthony & the Imperials to the upper reaches of the
charts (though it missed the Top Ten). The follow-ups "My
Empty Room" and "Please Say You Want Me"
flopped, however, and Little Anthony decided to try a solo
career in late 1961.
The Imperials continued on with a new
lineup of Collins, Wright, Sammy Strain, and George Kerr, the
latter of whom was replaced by Kenny Seymour in 1962. Neither
Little Anthony nor his erstwhile group had any luck on their
own, and in late 1963 he returned to the fold, replacing
Seymour. The next summer, the reconstituted Imperials signed
with the DCP label, where producer/songwriter Teddy Randazzo
made them a priority. His first effort with the group, "I'm
on the Outside (Looking In)", reached number 15 on
both the pop and R&B charts in 1964, reestablishing the
Imperials as a commercial presence. The follow-up, "Goin'
Out of My Head", was a smash, returning them to
the pop Top Ten for the first time since "Tears
on My Pillow"; it was covered quite often in the
years that followed, and grew into something of a pop
standard. The Imperials' streak of good fortune continued with
the equally dramatic ballad "Hurt
So Bad", another Top Ten hit that also became
their second R&B Top Fiver in 1965. A couple of smaller
hits followed later that year in "I
Miss You So" and the pop/R&B Top 20 "Take
Me Back".
Little Anthony & the Imperials
continued to chart singles over the next several years, but
only one — 1969's "Out of Sight,
Out of Mind" — breached the Top 50 on either the
pop or R&B sides. That same year, the group switched
labels to United Artists, and Ernest Wright, Jr. departed to
join singer Tony Williams' latter-day version of the Platters.
He was replaced by a returning Kenny Seymour, who was in turn
replaced by Bobby Wade in 1971, the year of the group's last
chart single, "Help Me Find a Way
(To Say I Love You)". Sammy Strain left in 1972
and wound up joining the O'Jays four years later; his
replacement was Harold Jenkins. Little Anthony himself left
the group a second time in 1975 to pursue solo recording as
well as an acting career, which effectively spelled the end of
the road; nonetheless, a Collins-led lineup did manage to
score one last hit in the U.K., 1977's "Who's
Gonna Love Me". Little Anthony became a born-again
Christian in 1978 and subsequently recorded a gospel album,
Daylight. Anthony, Collins, Wright, and Strain reunited in
1992 and toured the oldies circuit steadily thereafter. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide